Did The Cat Eat Your Gymsuit? Then These Books Are For You

Lizzie Skurnick wrote several books in the Sweet Valley High series. Her new imprint aims to celebrate and preserve classic young adult books from the 1930s through the 1980s.

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Originally published on September 30, 2013 10:09 pm

Young adult literature is big business right now; bookstores and movie theaters are full of titles like The Hunger Games, Divergent and The Fault in Our Stars.

So what better time to look at the original golden age of YA literature? Author — and occasional NPR reviewer — Lizzie Skurnick has written for and about teens, and now she's starting her own imprint, dedicated to publishing beloved and forgotten YA books from the 1930s through the 1980s — including, let's be truthful, some that made me squeal with excitement when I saw them on her bookshelf. Seriously, I thought I was the only person in the world who remembered Paula Danziger's The Pistachio Prescription.

" 'Nobody remembers that one,' that maybe should be on my gravestone," Skurnick laughs. Her apartment is lined with shelves piled high with beat-up paperbacks. "Triple stacked," she says. "Triple shelved and stacked."

These books — in these editions — are as familiar to me as the back of my own hand: Danziger, M.E. Kerr and Sandra Scoppetone, not to mention Lois Duncan and Ellen Conford. If you grew up in the '80s, you probably remember checking them out of the library by the armful.

But Skurnick says there's much more to classic YA than just '80s-baby nostalgia. "These were really books about America, about England, about China, about wherever they were set and they were about political movements and emotional movements," she says. "They were a way that I think many of us learned about something like World War II, or someone like Betty Grable, or the feminist movement."

Skurnick says these books represent a moment in literature that needs to be recognized and preserved. "As much as I love nostalgia — and I like to eat Lucky Charms — I would never work and reissue a series of books for nostalgia. It's to make sure that this enormous and vibrant body of work, and bunch of authors, doesn't get forgotten."

And they are almost entirely forgotten — except by a few people, like me, who remember those long still afternoons in the library. Skurnick says that's because most of these books were written by women, for teenaged girls — and written off by everyone else. "I've never met anybody who didn't know this period of literature and doesn't immediately assume that it's cutesy and about romance."

Some of the books are romances — and what's wrong with that? — but Skurnick is also publishing things like Sydney Taylor's All-of-a-Kind Family stories, about a Jewish family on the Lower East Side before World War I. And A Long Day in November, Ernest J. Gaines' novel about a young boy on a Southern sugarcane plantation.

Skurnick herself is a teen author; she's written several books in the Sweet Valley High series, and a few years ago she started a column for Jezebel devoted to discussing the books she remembered reading as a girl. That column became a book, called Shelf Discovery: The Teen Classics We Never Stopped Reading. And it attracted attention from publishers.

"I had followed her columns and remembered these books that I loved from the past," says Elizabeth Clementson, who runs Ig Publishing with her husband, Robert Lasner.

"We've done reprints," Lasner adds, "but we said, hey, would a classic YA be a good idea?" The answer was yes, and Lasner and Clementson approached Skurnick with an idea: Why not start reprinting the books she loved and wrote about? And while hoping a new generation will pick up these books, they're also aiming a little higher.

"YA has never had it's own literary canon, and I think Lizzie is trying to establish that," Clementson says.

Now, out-of-print YA can be a hard sell. Lasner says some booksellers have been reluctant to embrace the imprint. But some are ecstatic. (There seems to be no in-between.)

Danielle DuBois Dimond is the head buyer at Brazos Bookstore in Houston. She says she's excited about Lizzie Skurnick Books, even though she's too young to have read them the first time around. "It's really nice to have that part of the canon kind of brought back in, 'cause I think it's really been sort of underserved and underprinted," she says. "I'm really excited that we're taking these books a little more seriously."

Skurnick will be releasing one title a month, beginning this month with Lois Duncan's 1958 novel Debutante Hill. And in conclusion ... oh my god, All-of-a-Kind Family! I can't wait.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Young adult literature is big business right now. Bookstores and movie theaters are full of titles like "The Hunger Games" and "The Fault in Our Stars." So what better time to look at the original golden age of young adult literature. Author and occasional NPR reviewer Lizzie Skurnick has written for and about teens. She's now she's venturing into publishing with a new imprint, dedicated to beloved and forgotten books from the 1930s through the 1980s.

MAYER: OK, so admittedly, that's me but it's still the reaction that Lizzie Skurnick's aiming for with her new imprint, Lizzie Skurnick Books.

SKURNICK: Nobody remembers that one; that maybe should be on my gravestone.

MAYER: Her apartment is piled with books.

SKURNICK: Triple stacked, triple shelved and stacked.

MAYER: These books in these editions are as familiar to me as the back of my own hand: Paula Danziger, M.E. Kerr and Sandra Scoppetone, not to mention Lois Duncan and Ellen Conford. If you grew up in the '80s, you probably remember checking these beat-up paperbacks out of the library by the armful. But Skurnick says there's much more to classic YA than just '80s-baby nostalgia.

SKURNICK: These were really books about America, about England, about China, about wherever they were set. And they were about political movements and emotional movements. So they were a way that I think many of us learned about something like World War II or someone like Betty Grable or the feminist movement.

MAYER: These books, she says, represent a moment in literature that needs to be recognized and preserved.

SKURNICK: As much as I love nostalgia and I like to eat Lucky Charms, I would never work and reissue a series of books for nostalgia. It's to make sure that this enormous and vibrant body of work, and bunch of authors, doesn't get forgotten.

MAYER: And they are almost entirely forgotten except by a few people, like me, who remember those long, still afternoons in the library. Skurnick says that's because most of these books were written by women, for teenaged girls, and written off by everyone else.

SKURNICK: I've never met anybody who didn't know this period of literature, who does not immediately assume that it's cutesy and that it's about romance.

MAYER: Some of the books are romances and what's wrong with that? But Skurnick is also publishing things like Sydney Taylor's "All-of-a-Kind Family" stories, about a Jewish family on the Lower East Side before the First World War, and "A Long Day in November," Ernest J. Gaines' novel about a young boy on a Southern sugarcane plantation.

Skurnick herself is a teen author. She's written several books in the "Sweet Valley High" series. And a few years ago, she started a column for Jezebel devoted to discussing the books she remembered reading as a girl. That column became a book, called "Shelf Discovery: The Teen Classics We Never Stopped Reading." And it attracted attention from publishers.

ELIZABETH CLEMENTSON: I had followed her columns and remembered these books that I loved from the past.

MAYER: That's Elizabeth Clementson, who runs Ig Publishing with her husband, Robert Lasner.

ROBERT LASNER: We've done reprints, but we said, hey, would a classic YA be a good idea. And Elizabeth said...

CLEMENTSON: I thought it was actually a fabulous idea.

MAYER: Lasner and Clementson approached Skurnick. Why not start reprinting the books she loved and wrote about? And while they're hoping a new generation will pick up these books, they're aiming higher.

CLEMENTSON: YA has never had its own literary canon and I think Lizzie is trying to establish that.

MAYER: Lasner and Clementson recognize that out-of-print YA can be a hard sell. Lasner says some booksellers have been reluctant to embrace the imprint. But some of them are ecstatic. There seems to be no in-between.

Danielle DuBois Dimond is the head bookseller at Brazos Bookstore in Houston Texas. She says she is excited about Lizzie Skurnick Books, even though she's too young to have read them the first time around.

DANIELLE DUBOIS DIMOND: It's really nice to have that part of the canon kind of brought back in, 'cause I think it's really been sort of underserved and under-printed. And I'm really excited that we're taking these books a little bit more seriously.

MAYER: Skurnick will be releasing one title a month beginning this month with Lois Duncan's 1958 novel "Debutante Hill" and in conclusion, oh, my god, "All of a Kind Family" - I can't wait.